By Nick Robson
Charlie Johnston was always destined to take over from his record-breaking father Mark at their Middleham base. But to have a realistic Betfred Derby contender through Dubai Mile in his first year with just his name on the licence has certainly exceeded his expectations.
While Johnston senior went close at Epsom with Dee Ex Bee in 2018, finishing second to Masar, the blue riband event was one of only a handful of major races to elude him during a stellar career.
š June 2, 2018
— Racing TV (@RacingTV) May 28, 2019
š @EpsomRacecourse
Masar got the better of Dee Ex Bee and Roaring Lion to land last year's Derby, with odds-on favourite Saxon Warrior only fourth. šš#EpsomDerby #IconicMoments pic.twitter.com/gAy96gKSTs
Charlie initially shared the licence with his father last season before Mark took his name off completely, sooner than many thought but done partly through paternal pride so that his son would get the credit he felt he deserved.
Now, with Dubai Mile having won a Group One over 10 furlongs at two in France and run perfectly well in the 2000 Guineas when fifth, Charlie has a real shot at putting the Johnston name on the illustrious Epsom roll of honour.
āI wouldnāt be singing from the roof if he wins having done so in my name, in fact Iād be a bit embarrassed after dad had been trying for 30 years and we won it for the first time without his name on the licence!ā said Johnston.
āThereās still no greater race for a trainer to win, I think.
āThereās no race I can win this year that would give me greater assurances that when I go to the yearling sales, people will want to fill this barn again next year and try to find the next one.
āThis game is a cycle and you always want people to invest in you, by winning the Derby there is no greater advertisement.ā
Dubai Mile is owned by Ahmad Al Shaikh, who himself has had two of his horses finish second at huge prices in recent years ā Khalifa Sat at 50-1 behind Serpentine in 2020 andĀ Hoo Ya Mal at 150-1 to Desert Crown last year.
Johnston said: āHeās gone close twice in the Derby at huge prices, so Iām sure heās going there with huge expectations and heās great fun to train for.
āHe flew a team from his favourite restaurant in London up here and we had a huge lunch with all the staff while watching the (Saint-Cloud) race and he gave prizes out and I donāt think the team has ever felt closer or more involved than he made them.ā
Having only cost ā¬20,000 at the Goffs Orby Sale, despite being by Roaring Lion and out of Beach Bunny, who was beaten just a short head by Dar Re Mi in the 2009 Pretty Polly, Johnston has shown he can look beyond the obvious ā and feels others may have been put off by Dubai Mileās big white face.
āWe thought weād got a bargain at Ā£20,000. To us heās a very good looking horse, but bizarrely a lot of people would be put off by his markings for a start. Heās got so much white about him and he must have had a fight with a fence at some point as a foal as when you take the saddle off, heās got white marks all over his withers,ā said Johnston.
āHis pedigree, as is always the case, put us on to him. Weāve been fortunate to have horses for Lady OāReilly (Beach Bunnyās owner), so would always pay close attention to her horses. Another factor was probably the fact that his stallion was sadly dead at the time, which meant he was never going to get the same support as most first-season sires and he was a weak, backward yearling.
āIām not going to say we knew right away (he was good) as we buy 70 every year in that price bracket, but am I confident that out of 20 every year weād find one good one? Yes, but was I confident he was the one? Probably not until he ran in the Royal Lodge, if Iām honest.
Dubai Mile chases home The Foxes in last season's Royal Lodge Stakes
āThe Royal Lodge (second to The Foxes) looked ambitious at the time, because of his price heād been astutely placed to win two restricted novices, but I think the handicapper would have said he had no chance going into the Royal Lodge, as did the market. But it was a small field and it was a race we always like to target which led us to roll the dice.
āWeāll be taking the winner on again and a lot of water has gone under the bridge for both since the Royal Lodge. I got the impression up until York they thought he (The Foxes) was a 10-furlong horse and there was talk of the French Derby, whereas weāve always known where we were going.
āAhmad was always keen to go for the Guineas and, in hindsight, it was clearly the right decision because thereās been a hell of a lot more interest in him since then than before it. People take him a lot more seriously now.
āI said if he finished in the first six and hit the line strong Iād be delighted and that is exactly what he did. Heād have been fourth in another stride which would have been lovely but knowing he wants further, we couldnāt have wished for much more.ā
Since the Guineas, John and Thady Gosdenās Arrest has won the Chester Vase on soft ground. His first run since being beaten a head by Dubai Mile in France and yet Dubai Mile is available at a much bigger price.
āA lot has been made of our form with Arrest and interestingly heās about a quarter of the price we are. Itās probably not surprising given John Gosdenās Derby record and ours, but the weather forecast means it should be a good to firm Derby, whether it is or not weāll wait and see,ā said Johnston.
āIām sure Arrestās camp are a lot more worried about that than us. We might have won a Group One on heavy, but weād rather it was quicker as it might inconvenience a few others.ā
Of the others, he said: āI have a lot of respect for the (Jessica) Harrington horse (Sprewell), he looks overlooked in the market simply because Aidan (OāBrien) doesnāt get beaten in that (Leopardstown) trial and if you do beat him, you must have a good one.
āItās been a bit different this spring as the two trials youād expect Aidan to win heās been beaten in, with the (John) Murphy horse (White Birch) winning the other (Ballysax) ā and he ran a nice race at York (second to The Foxes).
āIt should always be the best test of a three-year-old and all the ones who deserve to be there will be there. Does 14-1 represent our chance? It probably does, it might underestimate him a little.
āThereās no horse in this race that we know is better than ours, on ratings weāre right there with them all. Heās a Group One winner who ran a good trial over an inadequate trip in the Guineas, so in that sense I think weāve got a rock-solid profile.
āThe fact he was a ā¬20,000 yearling and a bit more unfashionable probably explains why heās 14-1 rather than 4-1. Thereās nothing in there that scares me or we have 7lb to find with. If he improves for the trip, which we all expect he will, then he goes there with a good chance.
āI donāt feel it has added any pressure, itās great to have a horse like this, you need them any time but to have one the first year the licence is in my name is great.ā